Cannindah Resources Limited announced the next set of assay results from the drilling program currently underway at Mt Cannindah, copper gold silver project south of Gladstone near Monto in central Queensland. This drilling program was planned such that it may extend the current JORC resource, as well as test the continuity of higher-grade copper zones within the project area, and possibly locate new areas of interest for follow up and potential in-fill drilling. CAE has made major revisions to the planned drilling after Intersecting copper mineralisation over hundreds (100s) of metres in the first 7 completed holes. As CAE have stated previously, these intervals highlight the success of holes within the current drilling program in confirming the continuity of higher-grade copper zones within the project area, with the potential to increase the current JORC resource. It is also worth noting that the Cannindah Infill breccia mineralisation carries significant silver and gold in addition to copper. The controls on the higher grade Au and Ag zones are still to be delineated. This hole was designed to test the plunge of the mineralisation to the west, it was drilled approximately west (260 o magnetic), which is effectively 50 plus degrees different to the south-south-west (207o magnetic) bearing of hole 21CAEDD002. It is also drilling in the opposite direction to the previous (one hundred plus) Mt Cannindah historic holes. A significant point is that 21CAEDD003 confirms the continuity and extent of mineralisation in cross section, linking many of the mineralied zones intersected in previous holes drilled from the opposite direction. Significantly, hole 21CAEDD003 pushed on further down plunge to the west and discovered previously unknown or poorly delineated copper zones. This successful strategy led to the extension of hole 21CAEDD003 in order to establish the extent of the Mt Cannindah copper-gold -silver mineralised system down plunge. Eventually the hole was terminated at 762.6m, at the limit of the drill rig's capability. Although copper values had dropped off, chalcopyrite blebs are present. Sulphidic mineralised hydrothermal breccia is present at the end of the hole, just as it is in hole 21CAEDD002 which contains elevated silver at depth. In spite of drilling the Cannindah system to great depths, have not reached the limit of the mineralisation, encountering shows of copper, elevated silver and extensive intrusive-driven alteration and sulphidic breccia to the bottom of all deep holes drilled to date. CAE are encouraged that results to date show that adopting this targeted drilling approach will find more copper, gold and silver at Mt Cannindah in the future.